I called you here because many of you have been frantically phoning me since the weekend to come and comment on the various issues raised in the media about the state of the healthcare system of the country.

Yesterday it was even worse. In fact the general talk or the narrative is about the healthcare system having collapsed.

I thought that it would be important for me to provide information because it became clear to me that communication has not been done adequately by the Department.

It is very true and self-evident that the healthcare system is very distressed and going through hard times.

The burden of disease and hence the demand of healthcare has grown so exponentially that the system finds itself extremely overloaded.This has resulted in very long waiting times in most of the facilities and lowering of quality in others.

But has the system collapsed? I am not here to challenge that because I do not know the yardstick which was used to arrive at a conclusion of collapse. Surely healthcare systems are measured on some form of scientific yardstick to arrive at any conclusion.

As far as we know, this healthcare system is still able to provide treatment to the largest number of HIV positive people globally. Yes, our programme is the biggest in the world at 4.2 million people. In the next 24 months we are poised to initiate an additional 2 million people on treatment.

The launch of this programme will be on the 28th of this month. Our public health system is still able to treat all patients who suffer from TB – 300 000 of them. We are the first country to get to scale in the use of TB diagnostic and early introduction of the latest medication for TB. As far as we know 40% of all GeneXpert catridges used to diagnose TB in the world is in the South African public sector. Of the total number of people globally on new TB treatment bedaquiline, 60% of them are in our country.

In 2009, a total of 69 251 people had died of TB. The figure dropped to 33 063 in 2015. This is more than 50% reduction.

In 2004, a total of 70 000 babies were born HIV positive, the figure has dropped to below 4 500 now.

The public healthcare system is still able to take care of 1,06 million pregnant women out of the total figure of 1,2 million pregnant women.To make sure that we are adequately taking care of them we have them registered on a system called MomConnect, through which we communicate with them every single week.

Cumulatively since August 2014 we had registered over 2 million pregnant women on this system. Out of this number, 1 620 lodged complaints about the healthcare system. But in the same period, a total of 15 440 sent us messages of compliments. This is unsolicited information.

We do not then think that a collapsing or collapsed system can be able to do these.

Yes we accept and are very worried about extreme overcrowding in our hospitals and we believe that it could have been much worse if we did not take proactive steps.

One of these steps was to decant patient away from the clinics and hospitals to take their medication in selected pick-up points. These are pick-up points selected by the patients themselves. We have 2,2 million people on this system called CCMDD (Central Chronic Medication Dispensing and Distribution) Programme. We are poised to load 1 million more people on this system during this financial year.

We heard yesterday a dramatic statement that our public health facilities have run out of medicines.We were very surprised because barring North West with its recent troubles, the concept of drug stockouts in our facilities has long been solved, with a new technology that we launched in 2014. In our clinics we have the SVS (Stock Visibility System) which we launched with the Vodacom Foundation. We are able to monitor stocks in all our clinics straight from Head Office in Pretoria, and we do so every single week. In our hospitals we have the Rx Solution.